Phase 2G-4: Convergence — Final Summary & Verdict#

Note

200K-token execution prompt. Copy-paste everything below the horizontal rule into a new Claude Code session.

Prerequisite: Sessions 2G-1, 2G-2, and 2G-3 must have completed and produced their output files before running this.

For the 1M-token alternative (not used), see Phase 2g (1M-Token Version): Final Summary, Maturity & Freeze.


/clear /compact /effort max

You are producing the Final Phase 2 synthesis for the JUB OOv2 matheology restructuring project. This is Session 2G-4: convergence.

Three independent stress-test sessions have examined the 33-objection quest from different angles –

  • 2G-1 (Mathematical Rigor): graded each Se1 resolution, traced the core logical chain, identified the weakest mathematical link.

  • 2G-2 (Institutional Feasibility): graded ResearchCity solution credibility, evaluated the 7-stage plan, ranked heroic assumptions.

  • 2G-3 (Disposition Audit): independently reassessed all 33 dispositions for intellectual honesty.

Your job: triangulate these three analyses, identify the strongest remaining critique across all angles, and produce the definitive Phase 2 synthesis.

STEP 0 — READ ALL REQUIRED FILES (DO THIS FIRST)#

  • ax1_A1. QUEST FILE (all 33 entries, ScoreBoard, Round Summaries) – source/matheology/jub/quest.rst

  • ax2_A2. STRESS-TEST: Mathematical Rigor – source/matheology/vv/jub/oov2/llog/2G-stress-test-math.rst

  • ax3_A3. STRESS-TEST: Institutional Feasibility – source/matheology/vv/jub/oov2/llog/2G-stress-test-feasibility.rst

  • ax4_A4. STRESS-TEST: Disposition Audit – source/matheology/vv/jub/oov2/llog/2G-stress-test-dispositions.rst

  • ax5_A5. MASTER PLAN (StayC maturity lifecycle, Phase 3 description) – source/matheology/vv/jub/oov2/llog/llog_2026m03d20_restructuring-1-master-plan-and-methodology.rst

  • ax6_A6. INVENTORY TABLE (for cross-referencing) – source/matheology/vv/jub/oov2/llog/quest-cons-table.rst

STEP 1 — TRIANGULATE THE THREE STRESS-TESTS#

Compare the “strongest remaining weakness” findings from each angle:

  1. What did 2G-1 identify as the weakest mathematical link?

  2. What did 2G-2 identify as the most heroic assumption?

  3. What did 2G-3 identify as the most consequential disposition change?

For each, ask –

  • Does this weakness appear in the other two stress-tests?

  • If an objection shows up as problematic from 2+ angles, it is a genuine structural vulnerability.

  • If an objection shows up from only 1 angle, it may be a local weakness rather than a structural one.

Produce a convergence matrix, using this format:

.. list-table:: Convergence Matrix
   :header-rows: 1

   * - Objection
     - Math Rigor Finding
     - Feasibility Finding
     - Disposition Finding
     - Convergence Score (1--3)

Include only objections flagged by at least one stress-test. Sort by convergence score (3 = flagged by all three angles).

STEP 2 — THE VERDICT: STRONGEST REMAINING CRITIQUE#

Based on the convergence matrix, produce a definitive ranking of the top 5 strongest remaining critiques. For each:

  1. State the objection and its current disposition

  2. Explain why it survives all three stress-tests (or why its single-angle finding is nonetheless decisive)

  3. Assess the CONSEQUENCE: if this critique cannot be adequately answered, what specifically fails in the framework?

  4. State what would be needed to address it (proof, evidence, institutional design change, concession)

Then identify the single #1 strongest remaining critique and write a 1–2 paragraph assessment of what it means for the framework.

STEP 3 — FINAL PHASE 2 SUMMARY#

APPEND a “Final Phase 2 Summary: All 33 Objections” section to quest.rst, AFTER the Round 3 Summary.

Do NOT modify existing Round 1, 2, or 3 Summaries.

Include:

  1. Consolidated ScoreBoard (all 33 rows), columns: Round, Con, Sev, Pro, Impact, Disposition.

    If the disposition audit (2G-3) recommended changes, note them in a separate column or footnote — but do NOT change the original disposition in the main ScoreBoard. The reassessment is advisory; the original grades stand as the primary record.

  2. Overall summary statistics: - Total: 33 objections - Resolved / partially resolved / conceded / deferred counts - Severity distribution (A, C, D, E, F) - Impact grade distribution - Average severity and impact (overall + per-round) - Disposition audit delta (if any reassessments)

  3. Narrative assessment (3–5 paragraphs):

    1. Strongest defenses — which Pros most convincingly addressed which Cons? Draw on the 2G-1 math-rigor grades and the 2G-3 disposition confirmations.

    2. Most significant remaining gaps — the top-5 from Step 2. Rank by consequence.

    3. Concession pattern — what do the 3 concessions + disposition audit findings reveal about strengths/weaknesses?

    4. How the three rounds differed — Round 1: broad sweep (math + implementation) Round 2: deep technical drilling (specific mechanisms) Round 3: entirely feasibility (no Se1) What does this progression reveal?

    5. The verdict — what does the strongest remaining critique (Step 2) mean for the framework’s maturity? Where does it stand after 33 objections?

STEP 4 — MATURITY STATUS ASSESSMENT#

Using the StayC maturity lifecycle from the master plan, assess whether each axiom and theorem should advance from QQ status.

The master plan says QQ -> RR requires “all critical resolved.”

  1. For the framework as a whole: QQ or RR?

  2. Per-item maturity table, using this format:

    .. list-table:: Maturity Status After Phase 2
       :header-rows: 1
    
       * - Item
         - Current Status
         - Objections Received
         - Unresolved Issues
         - Recommended Status
         - Justification
    

    Populate for ax15_A15–ax25_A25 and th5_T5–th11_T11.

  3. If QQ is maintained, specify what Phase 3 must address.

APPEND to quest.rst, AFTER the Final Summary.

Also update the “Maturity Status” section near the top of quest.rst if warranted. If no change, add a note: “Status reviewed after Phase 2 (33 objections); QQ maintained. See Final Phase 2 Summary.”

STEP 5 — PHASE 3 PRIORITIES#

Based on the stress-test findings and maturity assessment, produce a prioritized Phase 3 work list.

Cross-reference with the master plan’s Phase 3 description: - ZION algorithm formalization - 4-phase innovation engine - Sharpened 2-attractor proof - Any new axioms/theorems needed

APPEND as a “Phase 3 Priorities” section to quest.rst, AFTER the maturity assessment.

STEP 6 — BUILD CHECK#

Run: make html

Fix any NEW warnings or errors. Leave pre-existing warnings alone.

CRITICAL RULES#

  1. llog files are APPEND-ONLY. NEVER overwrite or replace earlier content.

  2. Do NOT modify existing Round 1, 2, or 3 Summaries in quest.rst.

  3. Do NOT modify the existing 33 Con/Pro entries or ScoreBoard rows. The Final Summary is an ADDITION, not a replacement.

  4. The stress-test findings are advisory input. Use them to inform your narrative and rankings, but exercise independent judgment. If you disagree with a stress-test finding, say so and explain.

  5. Steel-man principle: when stating the “strongest remaining critique,” give it its most powerful formulation.

  6. LANGUAGE RULES: a. NEVER use bare “Jubilee” as standalone noun. b. NEVER use “the” for unproven superlatives.

TELES migration report (2026m04d04)

Mechanical identifier migration applied to this file. All axiom/theorem text references were migrated from short form (e.g., A15) to compound form (e.g., ax15_A15) as part of the matheology compound naming operation. Both forms refer to the same formal object. The old form survives as the suffix to ensure consistency with the oldest records; the new form adds a temporary-status prefix. Forward-facing pages use brief form (ax15) only. See TELES Axiom/Theorem Compound Naming — Execution Prompt for the complete mapping table and DD b12 — Legacy Naming for PET/JUB Axioms and Theorems for the permanent reference.